‘Ever the Teacher’

William G. Bowen *58 left his mark on Princeton — and higher education

William G. Bowen *58, Princeton’s 17th president (1982 photo)

William Sauro/The New York Times/Redux

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By Christopher Connell ’71

Published Nov. 23, 2016

8 min read

To the surprise of no one, Bill Bowen *58 sprinted to the finish line.

Weeks before his death Oct. 20 at age 83, the 17th president of Princeton emailed dozens of friends to let them know the oncologist had told him and his wife, Mary Ellen, that further treatment would be futile. “The goal is as many good days as can be managed and to finish a few key tasks,” he wrote.

He’d spent a lifetime finishing tasks and finishing them well. His 20th book, Lesson Plan: An Agenda for Change in American Higher Education, came out last spring. His prominence in the public arena did not rest on being president of Princeton or the Andrew Mellon Foundation but on his ability to bring new, reasoned evidence to emotional debates about affirmative action, disinvestment, the excesses of big-time college athletics, and other matters. The half-price TKTS ticket booth in Times Square owes its genesis to a celebrated paper he and mentor William Baumol wrote in 1965 on the economic stringencies of the performing arts, bereft of productivity gains since it still takes four musicians to play a Schubert quartet.

Bowen in the classroom in 1985.

Robert Matthews/Office of Communications

He made the Chronicle of Higher Education’s top-10 list of tech innovators in 2013 for insisting on rigorous research before the academy plunges deeper into online learning. There was the famous footnote in Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell’s 1978 Bakke majority opinion citing the nub of Bowen’s defense of affirmative action in a Princeton Alumni Weekly cover story-cum-amicus curiae brief: “[A] great deal of learning occurs informally. It occurs through interactions among students of both sexes; of different races, religions, and backgrounds ... (who) learn from their differences ... to reexamine even their most deeply held assumptions about themselves and their world.”

Twenty years later, for an encore, Bowen and former Harvard President Derek Bok wrote The Shape of the River, a study vindicating the use of affirmative action by 28 selective colleges drawing on empirical data about the material success and civic contributions made by 54,000 graduates over a quarter century. Why speak ex cathedra when you could marshal facts instead? Bowen and Bok drew the evocative title from Mark Twain’s Life on the Mississippi on riverboat pilots’ need to know the contours perfectly to steer in darkness.

“Bill was ever the teacher, and he mentored large numbers of scholars, policy experts, and higher-education leaders,” President Eisgruber ’83 said in a statement. “I feel fortunate to have been in that group.”

His name, William Gordon Bowen, sounded to the manner born, but he wasn’t. Albert Bowen, a calculating-machine salesman in Cincinnati, died when his son was a senior at Wyoming High School. Bernice Bowen took a job as a dorm mother at the University of Cincinnati while he attended Denison University on scholarships, graduating Phi Beta Kappa and as a state collegiate tennis champion. He completed his Princeton economics Ph.D. in three years, joined the faculty, and by 31 was a full professor. President Robert Goheen ’40 *48 tapped the young labor economist as provost in 1967, despite their contrary views on whether all-male Princeton should admit women. Bowen expressed reservations that it would work, but Goheen suggested each could try to persuade the other. “Yes,” said Bowen, “and if it doesn’t work out the way I hope it will, I can always quit.”

“He was an operator with the sheer force of willpower and persuasiveness to make things happen.”

Tom Wright ’62, former vice president and general counsel

There was no quitting and no stopping coeducation. Bowen brought unparalleled energy inside Nassau Hall, acting as Goheen’s alter ego in that era of anti-war protests and fiscal constraints. The provost seemed “a whirling dervish” barreling into his reserved boss’s sanctum to Marcia Snowden, later the indispensable assistant to him and the next two presidents. He midwifed the birth of the Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC) and its Priorities Committee, immediately a national model for shared governance, and dealt fairly but resolutely with protesters.

In 1973, a year after Bowen became president at age 38, he stood for free speech when Whig-Clio invited Nobel laureate physicist William Shockley to debate his crackpot theory on the genetic inferiority of blacks. In response to protesters’ demands that Princeton purge from its portfolio stocks of companies operating in South Africa, he articulated the rationale adopted by the trustees for “selective divestiture” that allowed investments in companies working for racial justice. He spent hours in tense forums fielding questions, prompting a colleague to quip that students “needed an opportunity every now and again to yell at the president.” He steered the course that led the CPUC to reject demands for a boycott of textile-maker J.P. Stevens over its labor practices, making the argument that if a university took sides in every contentious political debate, its ability to protect academic freedom from outside interference would be attenuated.

He achieved what Woodrow Wilson 1879 couldn’t with the creation of Oxford-style residential colleges. He lent moral support to Sally Frank ’80 in her lawsuit against the all-male eating clubs. Embarrassed by anti-Semitic policies in Princeton’s past, he championed the creation of the University’s robust Center for Jewish Life. Working with then-Dean of the Chapel Fred Borsch ’57, he moved Baccalaureate and Opening Exercises from morning worship times in the University Chapel to afternoons. “They became interfaith services,” says Borsch, later the Episcopal bishop of Los Angeles. “The idea was to make people feel entirely welcome.”

Bowen with former presidents Shirley Tilghman and Harold Shapiro *64 in 2013.

Mel Evans/AP Photos

The workaholic would dash out at noon to the tennis or squash courts. Basketball coach Pete Carril was a favorite partner. Small talk afterward with faculty or students was part of the game. It was why Bowen kept teaching a section of Economics 101, says Robert K. Durkee ’69, his then-assistant and now University vice president and secretary: “It gave him exposure to a cross-section of students who were not student-government types or activists and a sense of what people really were thinking.”

“He talked to people endlessly, essentially lining them up and bringing them along toward a goal he had set,” says historian Nancy Weiss Malkiel, one of Princeton’s first female professors. With Provost Neil Rudenstine ’56, the Renaissance scholar and future president of Harvard, “he catapulted Princeton into the front ranks of the research universities,” says Malkiel, later dean of the college for almost a quarter-century.

Bowen expanded the faculty, advanced the arts, and engineered the prescient move into life sciences. Molecular biologist and future President Shirley Tilghman was among the stars lured to set up shop in Lewis Thomas Laboratory.

“He was an operator with the sheer force of willpower and persuasiveness to make things happen,” says Tom Wright ’62, retired vice president and general counsel and one of Bowen’s first hires. Wright, then a young lawyer at the Ford Foundation, hadn’t even known Goheen was stepping down when a stranger showed up claiming to be the next president of Princeton. “I thought someone was playing a joke on me. He was young and had these big ears and a lot of hair. He didn’t look at all like the president of Princeton,” recalls Wright.

Bowen possessed “an instinctive understanding and an unerring judgment about how institutions work,” Rudenstine told The New York Times. He worked endless hours — in the office, at home, at the beach house in Avalon, in the air, “wherever he was,” says Snowden.

He carted a Dictaphone on business trips, dictating letter-perfect memos and letters. His annual reports, not a ledger of achievements but discourses on major challenges faced by all higher education, were widely circulated and read beyond Princeton.

Bowen was “incredibly good at understanding how other people were feeling,” says psychology professor Joan Girgus, whom he recruited to be dean of the college in 1976. “He was the engineer, the cheerleader, the enthusiast and the planner, the careful, let’s-do-the-process person.” He was also quick-thinking. After Bowen and Rudenstine interviewed Girgus, “Bill was going to drive me to Lowrie House to meet with the search committee. We get in the car, he stops and puts his hand on my head, pushes me under the dashboard and says, ‘Daily Princetonian reporter passing behind the car; just stay down there.’” The secret stayed safe.

A memorial service for President Bowen *58 will be held Dec. 11 at 1:30 p.m. in the University Chapel.

It ruffled some conservatives’ feathers that the liberal Girgus, a product of Sarah Lawrence and the New School for Social Research, was brought in from outside for the job. Ignore them, he told her. On her first day Bowen took her up to Freddie Fox ’39’s third-floor lair in Nassau Hall, a monk’s cell crammed with memorabilia. She was moved “that Bill took the time to show me that side of Princeton as soon as I got there.” The next day Fox showed up with a Class of 1905 hatband for Girgus; her grandfather was one of two Jewish students in the class.

It shocked everyone when Bowen and Rudenstine both decamped to Mellon in 1988. Girgus recalls sociologist Marvin Bressler’s wisecrack: “Oh, my goodness. Princeton is a mom-and-pop store, and Mom and Pop are leaving.” But Princeton was soon in the capable hands of fellow economist Harold Shapiro *64, who as president of the University of Michigan had often crossed paths with Bowen at gatherings of university leaders.

At Mellon, Bowen had the resources and the talent at his disposal to do the research that went into The Shape of the River and Crossing the Finish Line, a 2009 study based on the records of 60,000 students at top public universities that documented the price paid by low-income and minority students who did not attend the best institutions for which they qualified. He got the inspiration for JSTOR, a cloud-based archive on which thousands of libraries rely, at a Denison trustees’ meeting, wrestling with how to expand the library to accommodate its bulging journals. He also founded ITHAKA, the digital publisher.

After a last dinner out with the Bowens in mid-October, Shapiro dropped them back at home, then lingered while the couple — who met in fourth grade — walked inside. It was past 10 p.m. Shapiro looked up and watched as Bowen marched directly into his study. “He worked straight to the end. It was just his character.”

14 Responses

Nancy Weiss Malkiel

5 Years Ago

For a biography of Princeton’s 17th president, William G. Bowen *58, I welcome stories, anecdotes, and other personal recollections. Please contact me at nweiss@princeton.edu.

Paul Firstenberg ’55

7 Years Ago

I was recruited by Bill Bowen *58 (On the Campus, Dec. 7) to be the first financial vice president of his presidency. The idea of returning to Princeton, coed unlike during my undergraduate years, was irresistible, and so I signed on to my great benefit.

I have never worked for anyone of such extraordinary intelligence in diverse fields as Bill or who had Bill’s limitless supply of energy. It was not uncommon for him to devote the luncheon break to a round of tennis and then pick up where he left off into the evening. I came quickly to understand that no one understood the world of Princeton, or indeed higher education, as well as Bill. 

Above all, he knew what made Princeton great was the quality of its faculty. He made faculty believe they were personally important to him. A friend of mine on the faculty received an offer of a tenured position at Harvard. As he explained to me, before he could study it, Bill was at his door to congratulate him and also to successfully persuade him to stay at Princeton.

He also had a keen sense of where change was necessary, even if there was not immediate support for a new direction. We would talk many times about the undergraduate eating options, and I kept telling him I didn’t get the problem — I had comfortably survived the old ones. He ignored my misguided nostalgia and opened up a whole new array of living and dining opportunities, to the great benefit of the University.

Art Shostak *61

7 Years Ago

Published online Feb. 7, 2017

As a newly arrived graduate student in 1958, I had the privilege before leaving Princeton in 1961 with my Ph.D. to get to know Bill Bowen as an adviser, booster, and friend. He was genial, upbeat, and a very fine listener, all in all an especially good role model for all of us, none of whom were surprised by his ensuing record of memorable accomplishments.

Paul Firstenberg ’55

7 Years Ago

Published online Feb. 7, 2017

I was recruited by Bill Bowen to be the first financial vice president of his presidency. The idea of returning to Princeton, coed unlike my undergraduate years, was irresistible, and so I signed on to my great benefit.

I have never worked for anyone of such extraordinary intelligence in diverse fields as Bill or who had Bill’s limitless supply of energy. It was not uncommon for him to devote the luncheon break to a round of tennis and then pick up where he left off into the evening.  I came quickly to understand that no one understood the world of Princeton, or indeed higher education, as well as Bill.

Above all, he knew that what made Princeton great was the quality of its faculty. He made faculty believe they were personally important to him. A friend of mine on the faculty received an offer of a tenured position at Harvard. As he explained to me, before he could study it, Bill was at his door to congratulate him and also to successfully persuade him to stay at Princeton.

He also had a keen sense of where change was necessary, even if there was not immediate support for a new direction. We would talk many times about the undergraduate eating options, and I kept telling him I didn’t get the problem — I had comfortably survived the old ones. He ignored my misguided nostalgia and opened up a whole new array of living and dining opportunities, to the great benefit of the University.

Robin Bennett Osborne ’81

7 Years Ago

Published online Feb. 7, 2017

Like so many others, I was deeply saddened to learn of the passing of President Bowen (On the Campus, Dec. 7). He was truly an extraordinary man, and I owe him a debt of gratitude for helping me to realize a dream that changed the course of my life in many ways.

When I was a sophomore in 1979 I heard about a nonprofit, nongovernmental organization called Operation Crossroads Africa (OCA), which sends groups of volunteers from North America to work on service projects in Africa. We had to pay our own way, and it was a considerable sum of money. I had two jobs on campus, but still was having trouble coming up with the funds in time for the early-summer departure. Then someone suggested I talk to President Bowen, who might be able to help.

So I made an appointment and met with “Bilbo” personally. He listened carefully to my hopes and my goals and my reasons for wanting to participate in OCA. (The project I hoped to join involved building a rudimentary medical clinic in rural Kenya where children could receive much-needed malaria vaccinations, among other things.) After some consideration, our president said that Princeton had a fund (created by a generous alumna, I believe) designed to meet the needs of students who find themselves in an emergency of some kind. 

Upon hearing that, I started to feel that it was unlikely I would be going on this adventure — not seeing my situation as an emergency. I was about to thank President Bowen for meeting with me when he looked at me and said, “The people in rural Kenya really need better access to medical care, don’t they?” Not quite sure where this was going, I nodded in agreement as he declared, “I believe this certainly is an emergency!” and offered me enough money to make the experience possible. What an incredible guy.

It goes without saying that a full summer living and working in rural Kenya, where many people had never seen a Caucasian person before, was an experience that enriched my life in ways I could not have imagined.

Thank you so much, William G. Bowen, may you rest in peace.

Charles Scribner ’73 *77

7 Years Ago

Bill Bowen *58 proved Henry Adams’ observation that “a teacher affects eternity.”

Stephen C. Carlson ’73

7 Years Ago

I believe that I am responsible for what you call the “famous footnote” in Justice Lewis Powell’s opinion in Bakke citing Bill Bowen’s article about affirmative action in the Princeton Alumni Weekly. I sent that article to my law school classmate and friend Bob Litt, who was at the time clerking for Justice Potter Stewart, telling him that while I did not know whom Bakke would be assigned to, the article was 1) by a good economist 2) who was also the president of a good, small liberal-arts college and 3) right.

When Tom Wright ’62 wrote in PAW wondering how the Supreme Court came to read PAW, I thought I knew. Bill Bowen was a good economist who understood the importance of discretion and freedom in admission decisions.

Michael Goldstein ’78

7 Years Ago

I’m sad to hear that Bill Bowen *58 has passed away (posted Oct. 21 at PAW Online; see coverage in this issue starting on page 10). When I last saw him, in a dialogue with fellow former president Harold Shapiro *64 at the Princeton conference on Jewish life in April of this year, he was as energetic — and funny — as ever. As an undergraduate in the ’70s, I didn’t appreciate Bowen particularly, as he was clearly part of the Establishment. I’ve come to realize how much positive energy and change he brought to Princeton.

Rob Bernard ’88

7 Years Ago

President Bowen was a wonderful president and an even better person. Back when I was a freshman at Princeton, as many know, Bilbo stayed in touch with students by teaching a discussion section of Introductory Economics. I was lucky enough to be a student in his discussion section, and it was extremely worthwhile and rewarding.

At the end of the semester, he invited the entire section over to the president’s house for dinner, and I had the best lemon pound cake ever. I asked his wife, Mary Ellen Bowen, for the recipe, and a few days later, she sent it to my mom — with a handwritten note about how she enjoyed meeting me. This really endeared not only President and Mrs. Bowen to me, but also reinforced what I’ve learned over 30 years — namely, that Princeton truly is a family.

RIP Bilbo — you will be missed.

Sheira Greenwald ’75

7 Years Ago

Bill Bowen was an enthusiastic supporter of coeducation — a major issue when I entered Princeton with the third class of women admitted as freshmen.

A humorous aside: At our fifth reunion, our class regalia included small squirt guns. Some people upgraded their squirt guns to huge Super Soaker squirt guns. As we reached the reviewing stand at the end of the P-rade, some charged the reviewing stand with their Super Soakers. President Bowen shot back with his own Super Soaker! What fun!

Jonathan Smolowe ’78

7 Years Ago

My roommate, Vytas Kisielius ’78, and I worked for President Bowen during our last three semesters of school. We bartended and waited at dinners and events that he and his wife ran at their University home. What I remember most was how often he’d come into the kitchen to spend time with Vytas and me. He’d drink scotch, eat peanuts, and schmooze with us. We once asked, “Shouldn’t you be in there with your guests” (often-times world-renowned people)? And he answered, “Nah, I’d rather be in here with you. They’re not as much fun.”

How can you not but love a man like that?

Robert B. Stock ’62

7 Years Ago

One day in the spring of 1959, the instructor for my Economics 101 course was unable to conduct the class. A young man who called himself Mr. Bowen substituted. Prior to that day, I had not understood the material very well. In that one class, however, Mr. Bowen’s exposition made the entire semester’s worth of material crystal clear to me.

I have admired and respected William G. Bowen ever since.

Jack Cumming ’58

7 Years Ago

President Bowen moved Princeton in the right direction to thrive in the closing decades of the 20th century. It now falls to President Eisgruber ’83 to set the direction for the early decades of the 21st. That’s a tall order, calling for extraordinary vision and powers of persuasion. Princeton has thrived from the outset under the leadership of extraordinary presidential leaders.

Richard M. Waugaman’70, M.D.

7 Years Ago

President Bowen, who died of colon cancer, was an exemplary Princetonian. He would want all of us to honor his memory by getting screened for colon cancer (with a colonoscopy at 50, or at 40 if a parent, sibling, or child had colon cancer). Death from colon cancer is preventable.

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